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The Wheel of the Year — Pagan Imbolc Celebration

Pagan Imbolc Celebration

A major topic of conversation at the Imbolc ritual here in my corner of Ontario is always the weather. Specifically, how cold is it this year compared to last? The bitterness of the cold always affects turnout and only the die-hard members of the group turn out for this one. So we tell ourselves as we stand, shivering in circle, celebrating the lengthening days and the return of the sun, even as snow spirals around us and the cold creeps in slowly through Arctic boots and insulated mittens.

But the hope that infused our ancestors at this time also penetrates our multiple layers and that is the whole point of the ritual. While the rest of the province talks about six more weeks of winter, depending on whether Wiarton Willie has seen his shadow or not, we are celebrating the return of the sun and light, longer days, the awakening of the Goddess and the rising power of the God as he grows to maturity.

Imbolc a Celtic Celebration

Imbolc has many names, as most of the pagan rituals do. Imbolc can also be referred to as Imbolg, Candlemas (the Christianized name), Oilmelc, Lupercalia, Feast of Pan, Brigid’s Day and more. It is the “Feast of Lights,” a fire festival that celebrates light rather than heat.

According to Jeff McQueen, Wiccan and Priest, 1st degree with the Wiccan Church of Canada, “Imbolc is not a northern hemisphere Sabbat. It’s not a German, Slavic, Norwegian Sabbat. It is a Celtic Sabbat. It is a midway-to-the-equator from the Germanic tribes celebration. It’s a Great Britain, Irish, Celtic celebration.”

What this means is that it originated in a climate that is 30-days ahead of where more northern climates are, where farmers are looking forward to planting crops and lambs being born, while in the north, we’re still hunkered down and hibernating. For some pagans, says McQueen, there are complaints about this, as people find it difficult to relate to celebrations that are out of sync with what is happening in the local climate.

The Greater Sabbats and the Meaning of Imbolc

Wiccans consider Imbolc to be one of their major celebrations, and it is a Greater Sabbat. The celebrations that fall on the equinoxes and solstices are considered the Lesser Sabbats. The Greater Sabbats include Beltane, Lughnasadh, and Samhain as well as Imbolc.

Imbolc is celebrated on either February 1st or 2nd, depending on the text referenced or tradition followed. According to D. J. Conway’s Wicca: The Complete Craft, the name Imbolc may have derived from “imb-fholc,” the Celtic word for washing oneself, or “imbolg,” the Celtic word for “in the belly.” The connection to “in the belly” is the birthing of ewes at this time of the year.

Celebrating the Goddess and New Beginnings

Imbolc is about new beginnings and awakenings, which are the symbolic links to the references to washing oneself and to birthing lambs. It is the first ritual of the calendar year and a time for starting the cycle of the year over again. Initiations to the group are common during Imbolc in some Wiccan groups.

Brigid is the Celtic Fire Goddess. The Goddess at this time is in her maiden aspect and her fire is the spark of light that transforms, heals, and awakens visions. Light can be incorporated into ritual by burning the greenery that was saved from the previous Yule ritual. The intent is to usher out winter and invite in spring. Spring cleaning, though it might seem early in the year for this, can be done as a way to purify your surroundings, which will have a positive effect psychologically at a time when winter’s harshness still holds thrall in many places.

The reward for showing up to an Imbolc ritual is that it reminds us that we’re not isolated as we get together with friends and loved ones during the height of winter. It also strengthens our connection to nature at a time when some of us are reluctant to venture forth in it. The hot spiced cider and comfort foods at the potluck that follows are also nice, and, in Canada, it’s another opportunity to talk about the weather, of course. When the Wheel of the Year turns again, winter will succumb to spring, slowly but surely, and the next celebration, Ostara, will be much milder.

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